It’s not ridiculous, this whole cost cap model is built on the success of it in American sports.ispano6 wrote: ↑03 Oct 2022, 18:37It's ridiculous to compare American contact sports with F1. When you're driving down the street and crash into another car, your insurance company which you pay for covers the damage and hospital costs. You can also be sued, separately. Concussions in contact sports have led to lawsuits as well as payments for damages. To say that a team or another driver is not responsible for career ending or possibly life-ending injuries is gross negligence. Consider the team the insurance company of the driver.Hoffman900 wrote: ↑03 Oct 2022, 18:20The crash fund / funding crashes is ridiculous. It’s a risk built into the sport.
In cost cap American sports, if a player gets injured by another opponent, the other team isn’t responsible. Racing should be no different.
These type of thought experiments is what makes F1 needlessly complicated.
Insurance in racing is ridiculous, and most are against it because if takes away a risk knowing you’re going to get bailed out. It exists for track day participants, but even amateur wheel to wheel racers don’t carry it because it’s nearly impossible to get for a competition. Track days are untimed events, usually people with street cars, so it’s less of a risk.
The drivers are basically contract workers and typically carry their own insurance, and a pro driver, it’s expensive and you do (smart to) cover the risk of a career ending injury. Contact sports are like that too. But to insure equipment for on track incidents against the cost cap is silly.